From its shaky start, you’d think Appaloosa a first-time effort, but director/star Ed Harris already has Pollock to his credit. The good news is that the film grows in assurance. A revisionist Western in the vein of Unforgiven, it plumbs the gray areas in black-and-white frontier justice. We have Virgil Cole (Harris), a gunman who hires out only to the law, and Randall Bragg (a droll and steely Jeremy Irons), a ruthless rattlesnake with a quick trigger finger and homicidal tendencies. Bragg has paralyzed the town of the title, so the citizenry turn to Cole, setting up the archetypal stand-off and imminent showdown. Despite such conventional elements, the material, adapted from Robert Parker’s 2005 novel, moves in unexpected and rewarding directions. Harris plays it straight up, and the ensemble, among them Viggo Mortensen, Renée Zellweger and Lance Henriksen, bring heft to their roles. 114 minutes | Boston Film Festival at Kendall Square, September 12

HOLLYWOOD, RI-STYLE | July 30, 2014 The 2014 edition will premiere more than 240 films (features, shorts and documentaries) from 62 countries and 34 US states.

GLOBAL CINEMA, LOCAL FLAVOR | August 08, 2013 The 17th annual incarnation of the Rhode Island International Film Festival begins its weeklong run on August 6. The festival, which boasts more than 200 films from 65 countries, is a celebration of the cinematic arts with a campus feel and a focus on all things Rhode Island.

REVIEW: SAFE HAVEN | February 14, 2013 Somewhere along the way Nicholas Sparks went from being just a bestselling author of preachy schmaltz to a full-on franchise (he produces the movies of his books).